4.5 Article

Experimental study and numerical prediction of tensile strength properties and failure modes of hollow spheres filled syntactic foams

Journal

COMPUTATIONAL MATERIALS SCIENCE
Volume 63, Issue -, Pages 232-243

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.commatsci.2012.06.024

Keywords

Syntactic foams; Tensile strength; Failure modes; Interface damage; Microsphere fracture; Cohesive element

Funding

  1. Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai Municipality [10dz1120600]

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Tensile properties are critical to the engineering applications of hollow spheres filled syntactic foams. The potential of such composites cannot be fully realized unless their fracture modes and failure mechanisms under tension are fully understood, and appropriate modeling strategies for failure prediction are developed and verified. In this study, both experimental and numerical methods were employed to investigate the tensile behaviors of epoxy-ceramic microspheres syntactic foams with different volume fractions of filler phase. The experimental results indicate that mechanical behaviors of syntactic foams are dominated by brittle fracture mechanism under tensile load. To predict the mechanical properties of syntactic foams in terms of tensile strength and associated failure modes, a three-dimensional microstructure based finite element model was developed by means of a representative volume element (RVE). Cohesive elements were introduced into the finite element model to capture the progressive damage behavior of the microsphere-matrix interface. Complex failure modes of syntactic foams including microspheres fracture, interfacial debonding and the interaction of both features were well characterized according to the simulation results. The proposed model interprets the entire failure process from damage to fracture under tension and provides predictive capabilities for the strength properties of hollow spheres filled syntactic foams. By comparison, the simulation results and the experimental data are found to be in good agreement. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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